Sight Reading Speed

Race the clock reading random notes on the grand staff. Pick a key signature and a note count, play the row in order on the keyboard - green when right, pink with a higher or lower arrow when wrong - and beat your best time. Confetti when you finish.

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0.00s Best: —
Play the notes in order. The timer starts on your first key.

Build your sight reading speed

Sight reading is playing music you have never seen before, at sight. The quickest way to get better is short, focused repetition: see a note, find it on the keyboard, move on. This free sight reading speed trainer turns that into a timed drill. Each test puts a row of random notes on the grand staff in the key signature you choose, and the clock runs from your first key until the last note is right, so you can measure your note reading and watch it get faster.

How it works

  1. Pick a key signature and how many notes you want to read (4 to 16).
  2. Read the notes left to right and play them in order on the keyboard.
  3. A correct key turns green; a wrong key flashes pink with an arrow pointing higher or lower.
  4. Finish the row to stop the clock, then try to beat your best time for that key and length.

Tips to read notes faster

  • Read by interval, not by letter: notice whether the next note steps, leaps, or repeats.
  • Anchor on landmark notes like middle C and count up or down from them.
  • Practise both clefs together on the grand staff so neither hand falls behind.
  • Move to a sharper or flatter key signature once a key feels easy, to widen your reading.

Keep learning

New to notation? Start with reading the staff and notes and the keyboard. To get comfortable with sharps and flats, read key signatures. When you would rather read whole musical phrases than race single notes, try Sight Reading, or train your ears with Ear Training.

Frequently asked questions

Is this sight reading tool free?
Yes. Sight Reading Speed is completely free and needs no sign-in to play. Signing in only syncs your best times across devices.
Does it cover both treble and bass clef?
Yes. Notes are drawn on the grand staff across both clefs - from around F2 in the bass up to G5 in the treble, including middle C and a few ledger-line notes.
How do I read music notes faster?
Read by interval rather than by letter name: notice whether each note steps, leaps, or repeats from the one before, and count from landmark notes like middle C. Short, daily timed drills build the reflex quickest.
Can I practise a specific key signature?
Yes. Choose any of the 15 major key signatures. The signature is shown on the staff and notes outside the key appear with accidentals, so you read sharps and flats in context.
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